Sustainable intensification of cereal-based farming systems in Eastern and Southern Africa

Project Inception Workshop

6-9 February 2012, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania


Presentation: Feed the Future (Dr. Rob Bertram, USAid)


This workshop provides an opportunity for a broad group of important stakeholders to both learn about the project plans and to share their views on expectations from and opportunities for synergies with the project (days 1 and 2) and for the core project team to finalize the project details (days 3 and 4).




  • Food crisis in 2008 led USAid to review the strategy.
  • Africa was particularly hit by the crisis. Richer countries were more resilient. The poorer countries - spending more money on food - had an affected ability to cope with it. Quality diets (meat, eggs etc.) went down in those days, in favour of basic staples.
  • Feed the Future is holistic and has a strong emphasis on pro-poor growth.
  • Goals are: accelerating inclusive agricultural sector growth, reducing child under-nutrition, including women, integrating climate change and environment.
  • How to design agricultural programs that have a large impact?
  • Poor people are particularly concentrated in West and Southern Africa (and Ethiopian highlands) and South Asia
  • Research themes: productivity, nutrition, food safety.
  • It is counter-intuitive for many to see the pockets of poverty in the areas where there is intensive agricultural production.
  • Long term research areas: heat/drought tolerant and climate-adapted cereals + advanced tech solutions for animals and plants + legume productivity for improved nutrition and household incomes.
  • Sustainable intensification:
    • What? Integrates component technologies, NRM, socio-economic aspects.
    • Where? specific focal agroecologies, spillovers to other regions, targeted geographies and value chains.
    • How? Aligning partnerships (national and regional CAADP plans, US unis e.g. CRSPs, International ag research centers, NARS, dev donors, private sector).
  • Interventions of sustainable intensification - increasing productivity while reducing risk:
    • Improve water productivity/water use efficiency
    • nutrient use efficiency;
    • minimize negative environmental impact
    • Increase adaption and reduce GHG emissions per unit of productivity
    • integrate best component tech
    • work in farmer context, integrating local knowledge/perspectives.
  • Challenges: going beyond tradeoffs?
  • The bigger picture: CAADP, other donors, USAid mission, impact assessment, an R&D model for alignment, coordination and integration).